Missouri Gov. Mike Parson (R) on Wednesday signaled his preparation to cave to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-CA) effort to retain control of the House amid statewide redistricting.
Parson’s communications director, Kelli Jones, tweeted a threatening message to the Republican-controlled legislature that is internally debating whether to give Pelosi an extra House district to flaunt in the midterms. Establishment state Republican senators have filibustered the GOP favorable maps since Tuesday.
“Once again, it is the Missouri Senate’s women who restore common sense. It’s about time we stop tip toeing around a few men’s fragile egos,” Jones tweeted support for state Sen. Sandy Crawford’s (R) desire to block her party from favorably drawing redistricted maps.
Republicans have proposed drawing a 7-1 favorable map for the GOP, while establishment Republicans would prefer to draw favorable 6-2 maps that would benefit Democrats. Crawford’s excuse for blocking her fellow Republicans is that the 7-1 map would hurt rural communities.
“Voting for a 7-1 map doesn’t get you to heaven,” Crawford said on the Senate floor:
Crawford is not the only Republican blocking the Republican’s 7-1 map. “Fourteen Republicans, including Senate leadership, joined 10 Democrats in rejecting the proposal, with members of the Conservative Caucus and Sen. Paul Wieland, R-Imperial, voting in favor,” according to the Missouri Independent.
The establishment media has picked up on the Republican’s knock-kneed effort to help Pelosi maintain the gavel. “Notable jab from MO Gov. Mike Parson’s (R) communications director against a group of hard-line conservative state senators filibustering in favor of a 7R-1D gerrymander (instead of the 6R-2D status quo map that the state House passed),” David Wasserman, senior editor of the Cook Political Report, tweeted.
In December, the New York Magazine reported that Democrats were doing “weirdly well” in nationwide redistricting battles, echoing Wasserman’s analysis that Democrats have taken a two-to-three seat advantage in the redistricting battle, where Republicans were expected to dominate.
Establishment Republicans in Missouri may be influenced by Barack Obama’s former attorney general, Eric Holder, who has successfully defeated Republican state lawmakers in the court system. According to the Wall Street Journal, Holder’s success is a result of his “sue to blue” strategy, which he implemented after Obama took devastating losses in the 2010 redistricting cycle. About 75 congressional districts in seven states will be settled in the Courts nationwide, Politico reported.